Membership of the 9th Congress of the United States

 

March 4, 1805 to March 3, 1807

 

First Session:  December 2, 1805 to April 21, 1806

Second Session:  December 1, 1806 to March 3, 1807

Special Session of the Senate:  March 4, 1805, for one day only

 

Vice President of the United States: 

George Clinton (New York)

President Pro Tempore of the Senate:

Samuel Smith (Maryland)

Secretary of the Senate:

Samuel A. Otis (Massachusetts)

Sergeant At Arms of the Senate:

James Mathers (New York)

   

Speaker of the House of Representatives:

Nathaniel Macon (North Carolina)

Clerk of the House:

John Beckley (Virginia)

Sergeant At Arms of the House:

Joseph Wheaton (Rhode Island)

Doorkeeper of the House:

Thomas Claxton

 

Connecticut

 

Senators

 

James Hillhouse

Uriah Tracy

 

Representatives At Large

 

Samuel W. Dana

John Davenport

Calvin Goddard (resigned 1805 before the 9th Congress convened)

Timothy Pitkin (elected to fill in part the vacancies caused by the resignations of Calvin Goddard and Roger Griswold; served from September 16, 1805)

Roger Griswold (resigned 1805 before the 9th Congress convened)

Lewis Burr Sturges (elected to fill in part the vacancies caused by the resignations of Calvin Goddard and Roger Griswold; served from September 16, 1805)

Jonathan O. Moseley

John Cotton Smith (resigned August, 1806)

Theodore Dwight (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John Cotton Smith; served from December 1, 1806)

Benjamin Tallmadge

 

Delaware

 

Senators

 

Samuel White

James Asheton Bayard

 

Representative At Large

 

James Madison Broome

 

Georgia

 

Senators

 

Abraham Baldwin

James Jackson (died March 19, 1806)

John Milledge (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Jackson; served from June 19, 1806)

 

Representatives At Large

 

Joseph Bryan (resigned 1806)

Dennis Smelt (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph Bryan; served from September 1, 1806)

Peter Early

David Meriwether

Cowles Mead (election successfully contested by Thomas Spalding; succeeded December 24, 1805)

Thomas Spalding (successfully contested the election of Cowles Mead; served from December 24, 1805; resigned 1806)

William Bibb (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Thomas Spalding; served from January 26, 1807)

 

Kentucky

 

Senators

 

John Breckinridge (resigned August 7, 1805 to accept the position of Attorney General of the United States )

Buckner Thruston

John Adair (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John Breckinridge; served from November 8, 1805; resigned November 18, 1806)

Henry Clay (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John Adair; served from November 19, 1806)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Matthew Lyon

District 2:

John Boyle

District 3:

Matthew Walton

District 4:

Thomas Sandford

District 5:

John Fowler

District 6:

George M. Bedinger

 

Maryland

 

Senators

 

Robert Wright (resigned November 12, 1806 to become Governor of Maryland)

Samuel Smith

Phillip Reed (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Robert Wright; served from November 25, 1806)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John Campbell

District 2:

Leonard Covington

District 3:

Patrick Magruder

District 4:

Roger Nelson

District 5*:

William McCreery

Nicholas R. Moore

District 6:

John Archer

District 7:

Joseph H. Nicholson (resigned March 1, 1806 to become chief justice of the sixth judicial district of Maryland)

Edward Lloyd (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph H. Nicholson; served from December 3, 1806)

District 8:

Charles Goldsborough

 

* Two-member district

 

Massachusetts

 

Senators

 

Timothy Pickering

John Quincy Adams

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Josiah Quincy

District 2:

Jacob Crowninshield

District 3:

Jeremiah Nelson

District 4:

Joseph B. Varnum

District 5:

William Ely

District 6:

Samuel Taggart

District 7:

Joseph Barker

District 8:

Isaiah L. Green

District 9:

Phanuel Bishop

District 10:

Seth Hastings

District 11:

William Stedman

District 12:

Barnabas Bidwell

District 13:

Ebenezer Seaver

District 14:

Richard Cutts

District 15:

Peleg Wadsworth

District 16:

Orchard Cook

District 17:

John Chandler

 

New Hampshire

 

Senators

 

William Plumer

Nicholas Gilman

 

Representatives At Large

 

Silas Betton 

Samuel Hunt

Clifton Clagett

Samuel Tenney

David Hough

 

New Jersey

 

Senators

 

John Condit

Aaron Kitchell

 

Representatives At Large

 

Ezra Darby 

Ebenezer Elmer

William Helms

John Lambert

James Sloan

Henry Southard

 

New York

 

Senators

 

John Smith

Samuel L. Mitchill

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Eliphalet Wickes 

District 2-3*:

 

 

George Clinton (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Samuel L. Mitchill)

Daniel D. Tompkins (resigned before the beginning of the 9th Congress to accept an appointment as associate justice of the New York supreme court)

Gurdon S. Mumford (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Daniel D. Tompkins; served from December 2, 1805)

District 4:

Philip Van Cortlandt

District 5:

John Blake, Jr

District 6:

Daniel C. Verplanck

District 7:

Martin G. Schuneman

District 8:

Henry W. Livingston

District 9:

Killian K. Van Rensselaer

District 10:

Josiah Masters

District 11:

Peter Sailly

District 12:

David Thomas

District 13:

Thomas Sammons

District 14:

John Russell

District 15:

Nathan Williams

District 16:

Uri Tracy

District 17:

Silas Halsey

 

* Two-member district (Manhattan, Brooklyn and Staten Island)

 

North Carolina

 

Senators

 

David Stone (resigned February 17, 1807)

James Turner

Representatives

 

District 1:

Thomas Wynns 

District 2:

Willis Alston

District 3:

Thomas Blount

District 4:

William Blackledge

District 5:

Thomas Kenan

District 6:

Nathaniel Macon

District 7:

Duncan McFarlan

District 8:

Richard Stanford

District 9:

Marmaduke Williams

District 10:

 

Nathaniel Alexander (resigned November, 1805 to become Governor of North Carolina)

Evan S. Alexander (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Nathaniel Alexander; served from February 24, 1806)

District 11:

James Holland 

District 12:

Joseph Winston

 

Ohio

 

Senators

 

John Smith

Thomas Worthington

 

Representative At Large

 

Jeremiah Morrow

 

Pennsylvania

 

Senators

 

George Logan

Samuel Maclay

 

Representatives

 

District 1*:

Joseph Clay 

Michael Leib (resigned February 14, 1806)

John Porter (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Michael Leib; served from December 8, 1806)

Jacob Richards

District 2†:

Frederick Conrad

Robert Brown

John Pugh

District 3‡:

John Whitehill

Isaac Anderson

Christian Lower (died December 19, 1806)

District 4#:

David Bard

John A. Hanna (died July 23, 1805)

Robert Whitehill (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John A. Hanna; served from November 7, 1805)

District 5:

Andrew Gregg

District 6:

James Kelly

District 7:

John Rea

District 8:

William Findley

District 9:

John Smilie

District 10:

John Hamilton

District 11:

John B. C. Lucas (resigned 1805)

Samuel Smith (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John B. C. Lucas; served from November 7, 1805)

 

* Three-member district

† Three-member district

‡ Three-member district

# Two-member district

 

Rhode Island

 

Senators

 

Benjamin Howland

James Fenner

 

Representatives At Large

 

Nehemiah Knight 

Joseph Stanton IV

 

South Carolina

 

Senators

 

Thomas Sumter

John Galliard

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Robert Marion 

District 2:

William Butler

District 3:

David R. Williams

District 4:

O'Brien Smith

District 5:

Richard Winn

District 6:

Levi Casey (died February 3, 1807)

District 7:

Thomas Moore

District 8:

Elias Earle

 

Tennessee

 

Senators

 

Joseph Anderson

Daniel Smith

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John Rhea 

District 2:

George W. Campbell

District 3:

William Dickson

 

Vermont

 

Senators

 

Stephen R. Bradley

Israel Smith

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Gideon Olin 

District 2:

James Elliott

District 3:

James Fisk

District 4:

Martin Chittenden

 

Virginia

 

Senators

 

William B. Giles

Andrew Moore

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John G. Jackson

District 2:

John Morrow

District 3:

John Smith

District 4:

David Holmes

District 5:

Alexander Wilson

District 6:

Abram Trigg

District 7:

Joseph Lewis, Jr.

District 8:

Walter Jones

District 9:

Philip R. Thompson

District 10:

John Dawson

District 11:

James M. Garnett

District 12:

Burwell Basset

District 13:

Christopher H. Clark (resigned July 1, 1806)

William A. Burwell (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Christopher Clark; served from December 1, 1806)

District 14:

Matthew Clay

District 15:

John Randolph of Roanoke

District 16:

John W. Eppes

District 17:

John Claiborne

District 18:

Peterson Goodwyn

District 19:

Edwin Gray

District 20:

Thomas Newton, Jr.

District 21:

Thomas M. Randolph

District 22:

John Clopton

 

Indiana Territory

 

Delegate

 

Benjamin Parke (served from December 12, 1805)

 

Mississippi Territory

 

Delegate

 

William Lattimore

 

Orleans Territory

 

Delegate

 

Daniel Clark (served from December 1, 1806)